Abstract

Addressing health equity requires attention to upstream determinants of health, including environmental and social factors that act in tandem to increase communities' exposure to and vulnerability to toxicants. Cumulative risk assessment, which evaluates combined risks from environmental and social factors, is a useful approach for estimating potential drivers of health disparities. We developed a cumulative risk score of multiple indices of environmental and social conditions and assessed block group-level differences in New Castle County, Delaware. This cross-sectional study used choropleth maps to visualize the distribution of environmental, social, and cumulative risks and Moran's I statistics to assess spatial clustering of cumulative risk across the county and among individual block groups. Findings indicate that environmental risk rarely occurs without social risk and that environmental and social risks co-occur in distinct areas, resulting in large-scale clustering of cumulative risk. Areas of higher cumulative risk had more Black residents and people of lower socioeconomic status. Replicable measures of cumulative risk can show how environmental and social risks are inequitably distributed by race and socioeconomic status, as seen here in New Castle County. Such measures can support upstream approaches to reduce health disparities resulting from histories of environmental racism.

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